Marx's Utopian legacy

The European Legacy 9 (5):629-640 (2004)
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Abstract

The terms "utopia" and "utopian" have long been used in predominantly dismissive ways. That this is the case is due partly to Karl Marx and his followers, who criticized socialist competitors as ineffectual dreamers. But while Marxism worked hard to present itself as realistic, serious and scientific, this essay argues that core elements of Marx's own project are utopian. Marx's utopianism lay in the aim of abolishing the distinction between state and civil society, and in the harmony he assumed would emerge as a result of that change. Consequently, the very concepts of "freedom" and "equality" would be transformed; the old debates about them would simply be redundant in communist society. This essay will explain why such objectives are utopian and even dangerous, and then evaluate the importance of and problems with this utopian legacy. In recovering Marx's utopianism we need not accept Marx's implication that utopianism itself has no real value for social and political change

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Citations of this work

On the Possibility of Marxist Ethics.Buket Korkut Raptis - 2018 - Beytulhikme An International Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):131-155.

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References found in this work

The German Ideology.Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels - 1975 - In Science and Society. International Publishers. pp. 19-581.
The relevance of the utopian.H. J. N. Horsburgh - 1956 - Ethics 67 (2):127-138.

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